Hand-centric Human-to-Robot Trajectory Transfer from Video Demonstrations via Open-World Contact Localization
Abstract
Learning from human video demonstrations remains challenging due to noisy hand-object interactions, unseen objects with partial observation, and cross-embodiment discrepancy. To address these challenges, we present HOWTransfer (Hand-Object Open-World Transfer), a hand-centric framework that distills human demonstrations into contact-aware, taxonomy-informed, and diverse robotic trajectories. Instead of relying on object-specific descriptions, vision-language queries, or explicit object-state tracking, HOWTransfer recovers temporally consistent 3D hand motion and localizes temporal contact intervals by reasoning over observed hand-object interaction cues. The localized contact onsets are then used to retarget human grasp intent into multi-modal parallel-jaw grasp hypotheses, which are propagated along the recovered wrist trajectory to generate robot-executable motions. Finally, a trajectory editing stage refines contact alignment and produces diverse executable variants from a single demonstration. Experiments across diverse manipulation tasks show that HOWTransfer enables accurate contact localization and high-quality robot motion retargeting with 86\% success, which is preferred over teleoperated trajectories in a blinded preference study.
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